This paper draws from Frederic Bartlett's notion that
aspects of culture may influence the development of
science and technology. Combining additional works from
Bloor and research from cultural psychology, we discuss
several case (historical and contemporary) studies that
illustrate how culture and human-computer interaction are
interrelated. These results illustrate how usability problems
are tied with global cultures.

en_US

dc.format.extent

4

en_US

dc.language

eng

en_US

dc.publisher

Association for Computing Machinery

en_US

dc.subject.other

Human-computer interaction

en_US

dc.subject.other

regional design style

en_US

dc.subject.other

organizational design style

en_US

dc.subject.other

design ambiguity

en_US

dc.title

Regional Styles of Human-Computer Interaction

en_US

dc.type

cp

en_US

dc.accessionstatus

modt11jan05 lbjl

en_US

dc.contributor.corporation

Copenhagen Business School. CBS

en_US

dc.contributor.department

Institut for Informatik

en_US

dc.contributor.departmentshort

INF

en_US

dc.contributor.departmentuk

Department of Informatics

en_US

dc.contributor.departmentukshort

INF

en_US

dc.idnumber

x656703260

en_US

dc.publisher.city

Frederiksberg

en_US

dc.publisher.year

2010

en_US

dc.title.subtitle

Proccedings of the 3rd ACM International Conference on Intercultural Collaboration (ICIS), 19-20 August 2010, Copenhagen, Denmark